A shocking revelation from Warner Bros. earnings call this morning: Since they bumped prices on a bunch of iTunes music, growth has slowed down! Digital track growth dropped from 10 percent in the fall quarter to just 5 percent for this past quarter, which means less money—digital revenue grew less than half as much, 8 percent, versus 20 percent a year ago. Warner Music's CEO apparently conceded that raising prices during the recession, maybe not his finest idea.
The prudent point in this for book publishers, as Peter Kafka notes, is that raising prices like they wish to might slow sales down more than they think. The price difference between a $10 book and a $15 book is a gaping maw, so I wouldn't be surprised to see people react that much more vehemently. But we'll see—maybe people will pay more for fancy ebooks. [MediaMemo]


</img> </img> </img> </img>


More...